David Tecchler

David Tecchler, sometimes also written Techler, Tekler, Deckler, Dechler,[1] Decler, Teccler[2] or Teckler,[3] (1666–1748) was a German luthier, best known for his cellos and double basses.

Early life

Tecchler was born in Augsburg and moved to Rome while he was still quite young and established himself there.[2]

Construction

Tecchler's instruments are Germanic or Italian in their style of construction.

History

Possibly the most famous Tecchler cello known today is the "ex Roser" of Rome 1723, currently being played by soloist Robert Cohen. The scroll of the "ex Roser" is a sculpted portrait of its commissioner, David Tecchler's employer in Rome, who resided in the Vatican.

A 1706 Tecchler cello was acquired by the Canada Council for the Arts Musical Instrument Bank and is on loan to the Canadian cellist Denis Brott.

Other musicians who own or play Tecchler instruments include Anne Martindale Williams, principal cellist of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, who plays a Tecchler cello made in Rome in 1701;,[4] Casals disciples Marie Roemaet Rosanoff, and later Lief Rosanoff played a 1704 Tecchler cello that is currently for sale at Tarisio.com. The young Turkish cellist Benyamin Sönmez (+2011), who played a cello made in Rome in 1723; Martha Babcock, Assistant Principal cello at the Boston Symphony Orchestra and Principal cello for the Boston Pops owns a Tecchler known as the "ex-Feuermann", made in Rome in 1741; the Israeli cellist Yehuda Hanani performs on a 1730 Tecchler of particular beauty, tonally and visually, previously in the possession of the Von Mendelssohn family; Stephen Lansberry, a former UK music professor, now living in France, owned, for forty years, an instrument made in 1727; Marcy Rosen, soloist and member of the Mendelssohn String Quartet, plays an exceptionally beautiful Tecchler cello dated 1720. Her cello, owned by the famous Francais family of Luthiers for three generations, was shown in Jacques Francais's Lincoln Center Stainer exhibition in the 1980s.

Steven Doane, Professor of Cello at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, USA, plays a David Tecchler cello dated 1720. Professor Anthony Elliott at the University of Michigan owns a particularly beautiful Tecchler once owned by the Duke of Edinburgh.

Latvian Soloist Maxim Beitan plays a David Tecchler Cello dated 1698.

Ray Shows, founding member of the Artaria String Quartet (Boston 1986), professor at St. Olaf College and 2004 prizewinner of a McKnight Fellowship plays a violin by David Tecchler from 1726.

Swedish cellist Kristina Winiarski plays a David Tecchler Cello dated 1711 (formerly played by Lynn Harrell and Torleif Thedéen). It is owned by the Royal Swedish Music Academy's instrument foundation

The Metropolitan Museum of Art is home to an Archlute by David Tecchler from around the year 1725.

On 22 October 2019, musician Stephen Morris had been on the London to Orpington service, and got out at Penge East with his bike, but forgot his antique David Tecchler violin, worth £250,000.[5] He was reunited with the violin on 1 November[6]

See also

References

  1. Willibald Leo Freiherr von Lütgendorff, Die Geigen und Lautenmacher vom Mittelalter bis zur Gegenwart, Frankfurt am Main : Frankfurter Verlags-Anstalt a. g., 1922, p. 507 (de)
  2. René Vannes, Dictionnaire universel des luthiers, Bruxelles : Les Amis de la musique, 1951, p. 356
  3. Les Spectacles, September 21, 1923
  4. "File Not Found".
  5. "Tecchler 310-year-old violin left on train in London". BBC.com. 28 October 2019.
  6. "Musician Stephen Morris reunited with £250,000 Tecchler violin". BBC News. 2 November 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.